Jean Louis Nicodé Vídeos
músico alemán
- piano
- Alemania
- compositor, director de orquesta, pianista
Última actualización
2024-04-28
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Frédéric François Chopin Ingolf Wunder Jacek Kaspszyk Mozart Gibbons Huneker Jean Louis Nicodé Kazimierz Wiłkomirski Ponti Völker Schmidt Berlin Symphony Orchestra 1810 1832 1840 1841 1849 1853 1900 1919 1995 2015
Frédéric Chopin - Allegro de concert in A major, Op.46, Ingolf Wunder, Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra & Jacek Kaspszyk (Wunder's own orchestration) Frédéric François Chopin (1 March 1810 – 17 October 1849) was a Polish composer and virtuoso pianist of the Romantic era who wrote primarily for solo piano. He has maintained worldwide renown as a leading musician of his era, one whose "poetic genius was based on a professional technique that was without equal in his generation." On February 26, 1832, Chopin, not quite twenty-two years old, gave his enormously successful first concert in Paris, performing his Concerto in F Minor, Op.22, and his Variations on Mozart's " Là ci darem la mano", Op. 2. In that same key he began to sketch what would have been a third piano concerto—possibly for the debut concert itself, but more likely a bit later. In any event, he never took that project any farther than an opening movement, and never completed an orchestration for that piece, which he revised during 1840 and 1841 for piano solo and published in the latter year as his Op. 46, with a dedication to Friederike Müller. This Allegro de concert has remained one of Chopin's least-known works. Even in his vast discography, it has probably not appeared many times in the solo version. The brilliance, vigor, and abundant melodic appeal of this music make its neglect hard to understand, and in fact it has not been without its champions, though few virtuoso performers have been among them. James Gibbons Huneker, in his book ‘Chopin: The Man and His Music’, first published in 1900, noted that the Allegro de concert "abounds in risky skips, ambuscades of dangerous double notes, and the principal themes are bold and expressive. The color note is strikingly adapted for public performance. . ." It was Huneker's judgment that the work "has the potentialities of a powerful and more manly composition than either of the two concertos." More than one musician has tried his hand at realizing Chopin's original concept of this piece over the years. Jean Louis Nicodé +••.••(...)), a pianist, conductor, and composer of numerous large-scale works, made one such setting. One of the most respected musicians in Poland, Kazimierz Wiłkomirski (September 1, 1900, Moscow - March 7 1995, Warsaw), a composer of nationalistic music, onetime conductor of the Wroclaw Opera, revered pedagogue and cellist, made another orchestration that was faithful to Chopin's published score. The world premiere recording of this version was by Michael Ponti with the Berlin Symphony Orchestra under Völker Schmidt-Gertenbach. Austrian pianist Ingolf Wunder orchestrated and recorded it with the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra in 2015 for Deutsche Grammophon.
Jean Louis Nicodé 1853 1889 1919
Jean-Lousi NICODÉ +••.••(...)) "Faschingsbilder", Orchestersuite op. 24 (1889) 1. Maskenzug (Polonäse) 2. Liebesgeständnis (Walzer) 3. Seltsamer Traum (Nachstück) 4. Humoreske (Galopp) Rundfunkorchester Hannover des NDR / Richard Müller-Lampertz
Hans Fährmann Jean Louis Nicodé Dresden Conservatory
The first of fourteen sonatas written by this obscure, German Romantic composer. He studied composition with Jean-Louis Nicodé at the Dresden Conservatory, where Fährmann later taught for 47 years and forged the so-called "Fährmann school." Recorded live during a lunchtime recital (11/24/10) at Trinity Church, Seattle. This recording could possibly be the American premiere. I. Moderato maestoso (0:00-12:45) II. Andante religioso (12:46-20:11) III. Doppelfuge (20:12-end)
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- cronología: Compositores (Europa). Directores de orquesta (Europa). Intérpretes (Europa).
- Índices (por orden alfabético): N...